Evansville Journal, Volume 18, Evansville, Vanderburgh County, 10 July 1867 — Page 2

iTHE EVANSVILLB DAILY JOURNAL. WEDNESDAY. JULY 101867,

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LETTER FttO ISDllXAi' OLISJL.

"fie f earth Abroad Lay! njr of-the t orner-8lone of the Soldiers' Home, Ac -I '-Indianapolis July 5, 1867 Xditors Journal: ( . I suppose your, regular correspondents have furnished you with letters missive touching what has been going on in and around Indianapolis on the Fourth. But I am an irregular, and feel inclined to give you a few lines, which, if they are regarded as of, any interest to your readers, you will print them; if otherwise, consign them to your waste basket. ' The ceremonies of the Soldiers' Home were a successa perfect success. Your humble servant hf3 'thought seriously of joining the stay-at-home brigade; but about half-past ten o'clock he was surprised to find himself whirled along on the Columbus Road, and, doing up thirty-two miles in about eighty minutes, was deposited within a mile and a half of . - the : center of . attraction; This ?datance was annihilated, rather slowly,' by two stout mules. ,When I reached the Springs, there was a most unconscionable massing together of vehicles of every description, and thou-: v sands upon thousands of people to correspond. It was one of the grandest rallyings I ever saw, and they came together in . their grandest mode of thanksgiving, and joy, and gratitude. They clearly took in the idea of the day. It was to give expression to their appreciation of the wounded and disabled .in the Army of the Republic, by offering them a Retreat where they could be sustained and cherished by a grateful 5 people. It waa not an offering of charity, but of thanks and justice, j , The programme of the occasion was ' strictly accorded with. The chief interest was in the address of Governor Baker. It was one of his happiest efforts. It was, like the man not for buncombe, but something to be thought about something, th.nt had rto do with principles and ideas which the nation, ought to settle now and forever, so that no second rebellion shall lift its gorgon head and , bloody hands. From the beginning of our existence, we have been " ONE nation," and not many nations, held together by a rope of sand. We have been one nation and one people. The Congresses, from the earliest colonial ones not being the creatures of the legistuies or the governments, but of the people themselves. It was " We the people" all the time. So this year of grace, 1867. Hence, secesion is treason, though the Governor did not use the ' word secession once. He expounded the nature of the Declaration of - Independence, and left the thing with the jury. ' I I may say also that the Governor did not introduce " the inevitable nigger," even once He spoke "of the fact that rights are more sacred than charters, as our forefathers proved by appeals to arms, to Gdd, and to the verdict of the world. He' spoke of the Golden Law as enunciated by the Great Teacher and Saviour of the world. He declared that the sooner we accorded with the great principles of our " Declaration " and the Golden Rule the better, and his hearers said, Amen. I have rarely seen .-o intelligent an audience and so orderly an one. I saw no signs of whisky anywhere or in any shape. Iudeed, ail : the people looked as if they had .habituated themselves to sobriety and decency. John Barleycorn. I under stand, has been driven entirely out of the county. Some lellow said that "Knightstown was the dryest place in J creation. But I can say the farms r and the people are none the worse for Jit. The grain here looks well; the 5 corn very much " mixed up." Some of it stands four feet, and some of it ; not more than four inches. I am ' afraid of the latter. " The flag of the Union, oh lone ' may it wave,"' was the last 4th of July thought of. Yours, M The Eight Hoar Labor Movement A Backward Step r The Trades Unions of New York ! may be congratulated on having come I to a partial understanding of the practical value ot the eight-hour law.- Un Saturday night they had before them I the possibility or expediency of senI forcing the orovisiona of that meaRhtc: The meeting was well attended. I and most of the trades' were fairly represented. -Formal resolutions ere passed,-declaring the law to be based I n jusyce sou equuy. , uut oeiore a vote was taken on these, reports were T received and read ; from a dozen or . more subordinate unions, all of which 1 j deprecated any attempt to enforce the law by means ot strikes The opinions of the dry goods clerks was hrst entered on the minutes While that overtaxed class of work ers approved of the eight hour law, they deemed it inexpedient to bring any immediate pressure to bear for its enforcement. One of the typographical unions represented at the meeting declined to make any positive deelar. -tion. The plasterers, with uncommon sound sense, held that a reduction of the hours of labor simply resolved it self into a reduction ot the amount of a workingman's wages. The painters desired an adjournment of the deliberations till the fall of the year. The carpenters and joiners deemed it advisable to confer with employers to " see if a compromise could be reached."

The -atone? masons vtook thev same ground, and the ship joiners came to the-Jirmclnsioii thatrthey: had last year strikes enough to last them for seve

ral fears. The brass tounders ana

"finiSteri: theWIshSri aMf Srttisli?f1frnhrnwe -spentfoT a-iost-eaiise,

and a number or. other corresponding unions reported in the same practical way, that they were not making too much money now by working ten hours a day the founders especially dwelling upon the. faet ithai "strikes in general were disastrous to workingnien." . j It thus appears that while the Central: Union seeks to maintain! existence by constituting itself an executive for giving effect to the law, the local unions, with barely an exception, agree, in deprecating any; immediate action, and present the strongest practical arguments against the' very principle of the , measure ' itself. New York Times..' ' ' , " ; The Policy or the South 5o Connection with the Northern Democracy. From the Charlottesville Va.) Chronicle, v We have no apology: to. make , for the- radical party with- regard to - its course toward the South.- - There is, it appears to us, nothing that can be said to excuse it. . . . ! We know that the Republican party have determined to 'break down all opposition at the South, and to make it contribute to the strength of the Republican party; j 4 ; ' ;1 rouj . this conviction " there "is1 practical thing which, the ; .South might do" tha.t would improve its treatment. One cause of the violent course of the Republicans towards the South is the constant irritation kept up at the' North by the,; Democratic party. The Northern Democratic press, for ctmpaigning purposes, keeps up a perpetual hot fire against the, Republicans advises the South to resist negro suffrage and the' reconstruction bill, calls on U9 to become martyrs, &c., &c. President Johnson fives countenance to this party, and y some ill-advised interference from time to time stirs up from his wakeful naps the radical monster. There is, in short, a regular war of bitter words going on all r the time between , the two Northern" parties, and' the Southern whites are identified in the Northern mind with the Northern Democracy, who pretend to champion our cause. What is the consequence? The lash falls incessantly, and at intervals the screws are given, another turn. The idea is we must keep these Southern Democrats well - under the foot, or they will rally, and co-operate with their Northern allies. That is the train of thought. We therefore do repeat what we have already frequently called attention to, that the first step for the Southern people to take is to disclaim all connection with the Northern Democracy. We have not one particle of respect for the Northern Democracy than we have for the Republicans. They got us into our troubles, and basely abandoned us. And they are doing us inSnite injury now by obstructing the settlement of reconstruction. They use us merely as so much political capital, and are no true friends. But whether friend or foe, they have no power, and are a perpetual nuisance. We have got to make terms with the Republican party they are the government, and will be tor a good many years. Now let public meetings lay it down that we de not intend to act with the Northern Democracy. We shall now make our position clear by adding that we individually are not going to the Republicans. A great many people are: a great many respectable people who act chiefly from considerations of policy are; we are not. If the Republicans, treat us properly, we will in the Federal elections vote for the best man they put up; but we shall not join the party. Policy suggests that the Southern people go over to the Republican party in a body; that all of us call ourselves Republicans. But we do not see how any conscientious man can describe himself by a name which is not true; we do not see how any Southern man can put on the livery of the Republican party without losing his self-respect, " But the thing is going to be do a e by a great many; people do not reason nicely; oaths, names, emblems, are barriers of straw where a powerful inducement draws a -man on to break through them. Democratic Reorganization letter from Robert Toombs. The West and South contains the following letter from Robert Toombsf addressed to its editor, Mr. W. M. Corry, as Corresponding Secretary of the Democratic Central Committee: Washington, Ga., June 19. ; My Dear Sir: Your letter of the 6th inst. was duly received, and would have been before replied to but for my absence from home. V Having but recently arrived in the United States, I knew' nothing of your proposed organization what it was for, or who were in it when I wrote my reply to yours ot the yth nit. Alter tne reception of yours of the 6th inst.. with the proceedings of the Cincinnati Convention, I accept with the greatest pleasure the position to which I have been assigned, and will cheerfully give my utmost efforts to. p.omote, establish, and vitalize those principles. The first Kentucky resolution contains the principles of my whole political life. 1 have stood by them from my youth to this hour. I have maintained them in peace and in war, in power and out ot power, in prosperity and adversity; and I am. as ready to-day,

as 1 was thirty years ago, when 1 en

tered publio-life8"a-oullifierriS-ia spend and be spent" in the sacred cause; and if my saerifiees of all sorts had been a thousand times more than they have- been, I should consider

rather than accept any other inter pretation of the American .Constitution. I, therefore, accept any man as a brother, in peace or war, who will honestly stand by and defend them: I will be with him as long as the weakness of humanity will enable me to stand by! the truth io my . own hurtTherefore, " sink or swim, survive or perish," I 'am with the West and South for the maintenance of the Cincinnati PUtform of A"pril 13th. . I will take immediate measures to organize the State of Georgia on that basis, and will urge the true men of the (so-called) ten rebel States to " fall into - line." . You can ' fully count on them I have tried them. I will leave home to-morrowwith the view ot beginning the organization in Georgia, and enlarging your subscription, as the means; of. propafating true constitutional ideas;: and will endeavor to send you subscriptions from time to time, as the organization is enlarged, (. .,,... I I regret nothing in the past but the dead and fhe failure, and I am to-day ready to use the best means I -can command to establish the principles for which I fought. ' j I am, respectfully and ' truly, your friend, R. Toombs. , , , the . . ! raiox pacific RAILROAD CO. Are now constructing a Railrofc d from OMAHA, NEBRASKA, ,h weBiward toward the Pacific Ocean, making, with its counectlons, aa unbroken line " " . . ACROSS THE CONTINENT. The Company now offer a limited amount of their FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS, having thirty years to ran and bearing annual Interest, payable on the first day ef Jauuary aLd July, in the City ol New York, at the rate of SIX PER CENT., IN GOLD, : at ' Ninety Cents on the dollar. Thia road is already completed to Julesbnrg, S7t -miles west of Omaha, and is fully equipped, and trains are regularly tunning over it. The Company has now on band sufficient i-on, ties, etc., to finish the remaining portion to the eastern bae of the Rocky Mountains, 141 miles, which is under contract to be done in September of this year; and it is expected that the entire road will be in running order from Omaha to its western connection with the Central Pacine, now being racidly built eastward from Sacramento, Cal., during lbTO. . Means of the Company. Estimating the distance to be built by the Union Pacific to be 1,565 miles, the United States Government isRues its Six per Cent. Thirty-Year Bonds to the Company as the road is finished, at the average rate of about 1.8,250 oer mile, amounting to 44,2U8,00O. lne company is also permitted to issue its own rn First Mortgage Bonds to an equal amount, and at the same time; which, by ppeclal Act ot Congress, are made a First Mortgage on the entire line, the bonds of the United States being subordinate to them. The Government makes a donation of 12,800 acres of land to the mile, amounting to 20,032,000 acres, estimated to be worth $30,000,000, making the total resources, exclusive of the capital, SI. 8,416,000; but the iuii vame oi tne lanas canuot now oe real ized. ... The authorized Capital Siock of the Com pany is one hundred million dollars, ot which five millions have already been paid in, and of which it is not supposed that more than twenty-five millions at most will be required. . The cost of the road is estimated by competent engineers to be about one hundred million dollars, exclusive of equipment. Value and Security of the Bonds. The Company respectfully submit, that the above statement of facts fully demonstrates the security of their Bonds; and as additional proof, they would suggest that the Bond now offered are less than ten million dollars on 517 miles of road, on which twenty milh n dollars have already been expended. On 830 miles of this road the cars are now running, and the remaing 187 miles are nearly completed. At the present rate of premium on gold, these bonds pay an annual interest on the present cost of ,....... Nine per Cent:,. '.'.' and it is believed that on the completion of the road, like the Government Bonds, they will go above par. The Company intend to sell but a limited amount at the present low rate, "and retain the right to advance the price at their option, " Subscriptions will be received in New York by the Contikkntai, National Bank. - - . i . rNo. 7 Nassau Street; ("iakk, Dodge Co:, Banters, ' 51 Wall Street; JOHS J. CISCO A Sow, Bankers, . . . No. S3 Wall Street; and . by Sank and Hankers generally throughout the United States, of whom maps and descriptive pamphlets may be obtained. Theywillalso.be seut by mail from the Company's office. No. 20 Nassau Street, New York, on application. Subscribers will .select their own Agents, in whom they have confidence, who alone will be responsible to them lor the safe delivery of the bonds. 'ptAi t i i jojiN J CISCO ' : ' Treasurer, - JJEW YORK. Agents at Evansville, Evansville National Bank. may3C dw3m A. C. ROSENCRANZ, Dealer in Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, &c. No. 12 SECOND STREET, . : Between Main and Sycamore. Personal attention given to Repairing

SnejWatches.

I Jam dam

STOVE WORKS.

SOUTHERN STOVE WORKS ANTON HELBLING, (Successor toBrihkmeyer Co.,), j . " MANUFACTURER OF ' , COOKING A HEATING STOVES, For Wood and Coal ; . " i Skillets and Lids; , ; Qvess and.Lida ODDIJDS;'! " . , SUGAR KETTLES; . r . . . ; DOG IRONS; r ' " : JAMB GRAZES; AIR AND CELLAR GRATES ; 1 , ,' HAM BOILERS; ', .MUFFIN MOULDS;- . j j . WAFFLE JRONfc (topper, -Tin, and Sheet-Iron War V I I :S fcC.CV I i. Dealers In , . i TInplatc, $heet-iron, Copper, c4 A ' Also, Sole Agent for O'Neil's Patent Broad-Oange, Indestructible Copper Bottoms, for Wash and Coffee Boilers, Ac Bales-room, No. 93 MAIN STREET, oppo - eite the Court-House. Foundry, near the month of Pigeon Creek. V Orders solicited and promptly filled janiU dtf Excelsior Stove Works. I DLEMKER, TILLMAN Co. . (Successors to H. E. Blemker), ' t TTASlTACTCRtRS of the fine and JLwL !..- .heavy t; r EXCELSIOR STOVE, the most durable ' now made, and the famous , . . ' CHARTER STOVE, M and the good and cheap . ; , Armada, Stonewall, Kentucky, TENNESSEE, and PALMETTO STOVE 4, and a great variety or HEATING &TOVB8, all of the latest and most approved patterns. , Also, Light and Smooth Country HollowWare. Skillets and Lids, Ovens and Lids, Dog-IroBS, Dinner Pots, Tea-Kettles ; and particular attention paid to the manufacture of House-Work . - --' . , CAST-IRON FRONTS, GRATES, Ac, if. -Also Tiuware; and Dealers in Tinners' Stock. If desired. Cooking Stoves warranted for twelvemonths. Orders solicited before purchasing elseFOund'ery, corner Sixth Street and Canal. Store and Sample Room at No. 14 Second Street, H. E. Blemker's old stand. BLEMKER, TILLMAN fc CO. . may29 FRUIT JARS. I'r'iiit, Jars. Fruit Jars. iniit Jars. LETCHWOKTH'S GLASS JAB, Tin top, rubber band, held by a screw. ADAMS'S GLASS JAS, Tin top, wire fastening; sealing suit. wax to CORK TOP. Glass Jars, with corks ; suit. sealing wax to BROWN EARTHEN JARS, Tin top, wire fastening; closed with wax. SEALING WAX AND CORKS r. For sale extra. MARK; & WARREN, . ' i ,; . IMPORTERS OF . , ', , - dneenswaire, Glassware, FANCY GOODS, &c, 18 Main Street. jun20 d2w ARCHITECTS. JR,otert Boyd, Architect, NO. 7 CHANDLER'S BLOCK. Office formerly occupied by the late firm of Mnrslnna & Boyd. mch27 6m H. MDRSINNA, A. It O II I T E O T. Offioe-No. S CHANDLER'S BUILDING, Corner First and Locust Streets, Kvansville, Ind. mr Plans and ipecifications for all kinds of baildings furniahed at short notice, and on reasonable tent a mcb.15 iXiva

- HEW ADYERTISEHEXT8. "Water Wneelsl Water Wheels! r VALENTINE'S Patent Turbine The betst in vum. Manufaxaured by Valentine 4 Co., Fert Edward, N. Y. Price moderate. Send or circular. Aents wanted. grand gift Enterprise : V ; OF PHOENIX. II O T EL .. r :i ' '. I AND . . .' NINETT - VALUABLE PREMIUMS, To be given to the purchasers of either of

tne following lutaawm ENGRAVINGS, viz.: " ASHLAND," THE HOME OF CLAY; R. E. LEE, U. 8. GRANT, OttORUE WASHINGTON. MARTHA WASHINGTON, And JOUS C. BRECKENRIIX1E. - The fallowing gentlemen have kindly consented to take chance of and control the drawing, with the distinct understanding that we are to have nothing whatever to do with it, viz.: Ex-Gov. i. F. Robinnou, Georgetown, Ky.; General John B. Hunton, Lexington. Ky.; Hon. F. K. Hunt, Lexington, Ky.; Hon. J. B. Beck. Lexington, Ky. ; E. I. Ssyer, of U. A. Bayer Co., Bankers; Jas. A. GrlnsteAd, of Grinstead, -Bradley A Company. Bankers; Judge S. H, Goodtoe, Thomas Mitchei, Esqr Canhier of First National Bank, Lexington,- Ky.; M. C. JoIiuhou, EsOj., President orttera Bank of KenTen per centl premium will be allowed to any person getting up a club often or more subscribers, to be paid either in Kneravlngs when the money is received, or In money when the drawing is completed. All money as received will be deposited In bank and heldnntil the drawing takes plaoe. If the enterrlKe should not be completed, the money will be refunded to the purchasers of Engravings. The drawing will take place ; ON THE F0CRTII OF JILT NEIT, Or sooner if the tickets are disposed of. In which event timely notice will be given. ' Write to us for prospectus giving full particulars. Agents will be appointed In ail pans of the country. ENGRAVINGS 5 EACH, And a certificate given to each purchaser of an Engraving, in the Phoenix Hotel Grand Gift Enterprise, FREE OF CHARGE. ' Remit by drafts. Postofflce money orders, or in sums of one hundred dollars and over in Greenbacks by express lo G5K1GSBY & KOBINSON, . Phoenix Hotel, Lexington, Ky. LIST OF PREMIUMS, No. L Phoenix Hotel and lot, 160 feet front on Main, by 233 leet deep on Mulberry, And 89 other valuable premiums, ranging from 11,500 down to iVJ each. NORTH AMERICAN STEAM- . r. t SHIP COMPANY. OPPOSITION LINE TO i California via Nicaragua, - . EyERY TWENTY DAV, With Passengers, Freight, and U. S. Mails. On the following first-class Steamships: 7 On Atlantic Ocean. 8ANTIAOO DE CtTBA, SAN FRANCISCO. NICARAGUA, JJAKOTA. Connecting on Pacific Ocean. AMERICA. MOSEH TAYLOR, NEBRASKA, NEVADA. Passage and Freight at Heducea Bates. Sailing day from New York : May 20th 1867 I July 2Uth 1807 June 10th and 30th " Aug. lotn and 30th " And every twenty days thereater. leaving on the Saturday previous when the regular sailing day coines on Sunday. For rther information apply to the NORTH AMERICAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY. WM. H. WEBB, President, M Exchange Place, New York. D. N. CARRINGU)N, Agent, 177 West Street, corner Warren, N. Y. WANTED EVERYWHERE Salesmen, Ladies and Gentlei .en JlOO to 8200 per month To sell the genuine Common cense Family Hewing Machine. Price only $18. This machine will stitch, hem. Jell, tuck, bind, quilt, braid, and embroider. The cloth cannot be pulled apart, even after cutting across the xearn every quarter of an inch. Everv machine warranted for three years. Send for circulars and terms to agents, or call at McDowell's Block, corner Fourth and Green Street, Louisville, Kentucky. BLIS fc McEATHRON, General Agents. A MES' Celebrated Portable and SlaJA. lionary Nteain Engines, all sizes. and superior to all others. Call or wi write for circular. Depot No, KI, routh Canal Street, Chi cago. III. AMES' IRON WORKS, Proprietor, '- Oswego, New York. Ladies, Discard Injurious Paddings. MtBAMJUHEL'S Mamrnarial Balm and Patent Breast Elevators develop tbe form physiologically. .Depot 907 Broadway, New York. Send stamp for treatise. Sold at Druggists and Ladies' Furnishing Stores. DR. J. I. KTILLMAS, Gynecologist, Fvrmula IybugnosU, and correspondence. Inhalations, SDrav. Hypodermic, Electric, and Dermapatbic Embrocation. with constitutional treatment la the Dis eases of Women, Throat, Lungs. Heart, and Viscera. Instruments, Medicines, Bathing and Drinking Salts Irom mineral springs, with written prescriptions weekly, at for the first month, t-J0 each month subsequently. Daily attention at his otfic j at the same prices. Address, with stamp, 34 and 86 Union Street, Mesa phis, Tenn. HOKSTMANN BROS. L 10., Fifth and Cherry Streets, .(..; .Phii.adki.phia," . Manufacturers and Importers of REGALIA and MILITARY GOODS. A full assortment of - properties for Lodges, Chapters, Oommanderles, OddFellows, Sons of Temperance, Am, Mechanics, Red Men,' -and other Regalias always on band, or made to order. . MILITARY GOODS of every description. FLAGS AND BANNER, Church Embroideries. Bunillions, Spangled Materials tor Vestments, etc., etc. - SODA FOUNTAINS ALL COMPLETE for S30 to SIOO. Patented, latest improvement, displacing all old styles. A recipe gratis with each iount for making bcSi, Soda Water and Syrups. Sold only by JAS. W. CHAPAIAN A SON. ... Madison, Ind. Address tnem for particulars. QTEAJf A HORSE-POWER THBESHO ING MACHINES. We build tteam ihteshers and Horse-Power Threshing Machines of all sizes; alno Portable Saw tills of various sizes. Our Farm Engine is the best in America, and our Threshers" are superior to any made. Sf-nc d for our pamohlet. JONAS W. YEO. Robinson Machine Works, Richmond, Ind. THE BEST CHANCE YET. a salar A uests WAXTil), on a salary 1EST8 WAXUD, on commission, for mv new map of the : G reat American Kepubllo.'' showing our recently acquired Ruian PosssioiiN, etc Get your territory at once. F. I. DIBBLE, Wholesale Headquarter for Maps, Charts, and Pictures, 'JUS Main St., Louisville, Ky.

New Advertiaemeuta.

-the first thlni k yon should do. after to- eaa m is neaaing, snoaia De to put your . .na in your po kct, take out twenty-lve cents, and send for copy for a year. If yon do not feel like risking that biz amount, why, nk your neighbor to take it; but m an AMERICAN yo should support an American enterfirlse. You will find oar paper worth tea lme the amount we ask for It. Wit, humor, sketches, and poetry will fill its column t, and tt will make a WIT,'- , of yon and" all you ''relations. No use of delaying; the amount Is not large, and you may as well invest your TWENTY-FIVE cents now as to wait six months. It will save a doctor's visits, as no one can read it and get sick. It is filled with sense, nonsense, and innocence, and twenty-five CENTS will make you as merry as a cricket for a year to oome. We want at least twenty five subscribers from our town, and yon might as well bead the list as -A So'ung man we know of in your town, end along your stamp the mora the merrier; and when our subscr plion litit runs up, we will send for a -YEAR a paper twice as large as the one we now issue. Addresi all letters to RICHARDSON A COLLINS, 42 John Street, N. Y. , ' - T 1 1 t ' Tobacco Users, Attention I The Appetite for Tobacco Destroyed ., . ..: -by.nslngV , , , Jl ' "OBTOJt'S PKmiUTI0.NV' CIIEWEKM AND NHOKEKN, leave otT this disgusting and filthy habit. , one box of Orion's Preparation, used according to directions, la warranted to destroy the appetite for Tobauoo in any person, no matter how strong the habit may be, lu one month's time. No more hankering for Tobacco after using oue box of this preparation. Recollect it it warranted. Forwarded to any part of the country on receipt of one dollar. Address E. DOUULAHf General Agent, Box 1,572. Portland, Maine. THE MORRILL PETROLEUM STOVE COMPANY Manufacture Summer Steves, for burning Oils and Napthas, that prove a decided success, making a blue non-iuminous flame, burning like alcohol; cooks charmingly. Send lor a circular. - WM. A. HOLLAND, Agent. 40 Congress Street, Boston, Mass. TO THE PAT It OWN OF THE CLEVELAND WATER CURE. The subscriber wi- lies to say, that, as It is now commencing Its Twentieth Season, be is better prepared than ever to give health iacilities to the needy. In addition to our Electro-ThertnaJ and Turkish Buth Departments, which we liHve enlarged and perfected during the lust year, we have also added the Exhaustive Air Buth, which is Invaluable in many casts With these additions to our Institution, we now command the greutest variety, the most complete bathing iacilities that can be lound in any oue place la the world. T. T. SEELYE, M.l.( Proprietor. $25 FOR 17SO CENT. Catalogues showlia tirloes we nav for coins. uuuim iui aw, voi a man tine, iic. MASON A CO., 434 Chestnut Street. Philadelphia. QALENHEN WANTED In every county to take orders for a fast selling Engraving, on which a large discount la allowed to first-class men. Address SOUTHERN PUBLISHING AGENCY, Louisville, Ky. WATCH EM W--,!,, f,.r - V"Z aim purposes. Gold and Sliver American Watches, cheap Jewelry of every dexcript Ion, Gold, silver arid Plated Chains. Old established house, ltfi.5. Send for price list. LIONEL JACOBS, No. 177 Broauway, New York. WASTED One or two Salesmen for this county im.l vicinity, either male or female. Address Immediately, BLIS.'s St McEATHKON, Louisville, Ky, MAW I C CAKDN f he most amusing thing out. Splendid article for parlor amusement. New thing ,ust out. Price '2h cents a pack. Address N. O. FOWIIA Y, Box 100, Cariuel, New York. FOOT LATHS, manufactured by CHARLES F. RosT, 328 and bJO Delancy Street, N. Y. Herring's Patent Champion Safes. 251 Broadway, corner Murray Street, , New iork. THE MONT KELIAIILE NECI7KITY from Fire now known. Over thirty thousand "Herring's Safes' have been sold and are now in nse, and more than fHj have passed safely through accidental fires. Herring, Farrel A Sherman's New Pat-, ent Bunkers' sales, made of Wrought Iron,' Steel Bars, and the new metal, Npirgel Eisen (or Paient Crystallzed Iron), from the ore of Frank Unite, the only matetiul which equals the diamond in its hardness now known to the world, and Is the best resiHtant to a burglar's drills or cutting tools ever manufactured. Also, House Ha'es, Parlor Safes, Sideboard and Cabinets Sufes for silver-ware, valuable papers, lJdies' Jewelry, ic, Ac, made to represent handsome pieces or furniture. S nd for illustrated catalogue. lieriing, Farrel 6l Sherman, Z1 Brpadway, corner Murray Street, New York; Farrel, Herring m Co., Philadelphia; lierrlng A Co., Chicago. CONFECTIONERIES. OoufViotioiiei'ies H. X. AHLIBISO. B. T. HASSLES. A II LE RING & IIASSLER, . Wholesale and Retail Dealer in randies, . ' Foreign Fruits, ; : Toys ! ' i. . -and . ,'fancy' wake, . ' o. 15 South Flnt Street, ' , ... in i. T . EVANSVILLE. We manufacture ur own Candles, and are prepared to suppiy vuo v noieoatv Trade at tbe lowest rates, and warranted of pure quality. We keep a full assortment of Foreign. Fruits and Nuts, Canned Goods, fine Preserves, Jellies, &c. Toys and Fancy Ware of every description, for presents and at tractive amusement. FIREWORK n full supply and general variety. Agents for O. I. Mallorj' &: Coa Ojslera. o32t dly

T. F. SH Ell WIN, with GEO. S. SOX.VTAG dc CO., HARDWARE, 2 FIRST STREET. may 10 3m Evaksvillk, Iks.